Arkansas
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| State nickname: "The Natural State" | |||||
Other U.S. States | |||||
| Capital | Little Rock | ||||
| Largest City | Little Rock | ||||
| Governor | Mike Huckabee | ||||
| Area - Total - Land - Water - % water | Ranked 29th 137,732 kmò 134,856 kmò 2,876 kmò 2.09% | ||||
| Population - Total (2000) - Density | Ranked 33rd 2,673,400 19.8/kmò | ||||
| Admittance into Union - Order - Date | 26th June 15, 1836 | ||||
| Time zone | Central: UTC-6/-5 | ||||
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Latitude
Longitude |
33°N to 36°30'N
89°41'W to 94°42'W | ||||
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Width
Length Elevation - Highest - Mean - Lowest |
385 km
420 km 839 meters 1,045 meters 17 meters | ||||
| ISO 3166-2: | US-AR | ||||
Arkansas is a southern state in the southern United States. The 2000 census was 2,673,400. Its U.S. postal abbreviation is AR. It was admitted as a slave state in 1836.
USS Arkansas was named in honor of this state.
| Table of contents |
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2 Law and government 3 Geography 4 Economy 5 Demographics 6 Important cities and towns 7 Education 8 External links |
The early French explorers of the state gave it its name, which is probably a phonetic spelling for the French word for "downriver" people, a reference to the Quapaw people and the river along which they settled. Other Native American nations living in present-day Arkansas were Caddo and Osage.
On June 15, 1836, Arkansas became the 25th state of the United States. Arkansas seceded from the Union on May 6, 1861 during the American Civil War. Under the Military Reconstruction Act, Congress, by June 1868, had readmitted Arkansas, as well as North Carolina, South Carolina, Louisiana, Georgia, Alabama and Florida.
The state is the only one with an official pronunciation. The traditional form "arkanSAW" was made official by the state legislature in 1881.
The current governor of Arkansas is Mike Huckabee, a Republican. Huckabee, who had been elected lieutenant governor in a 1993 special election, ascended to the governor's office when Governor Jim Guy Tucker, a Democrat, was convicted of felony mail fraud as part of the Whitewater Scandal. This led to a state "Constitutional crisis" when Tucker refused to give up the governor's office for a short period of time, because the Arkansas Constitution does not allow a convicted felon to be governor of the state. Tucker had been lieutenant governor under Bill Clinton and had become governor as a result of Clinton's election to the presidency.
In Arkansas, the lieutenant governor is elected separately from the governor and thus can be from a different political party.
See: List of Arkansas Governors
See: List of Arkansas counties
The capital of Arkansas is Little Rock. Arkansas is the only state in the US where diamonds are found naturally.
The eastern Arkansas border is the Mississippi River. Arkansas shares its southern border with Louisiana, its northern border with Missouri, its eastern border with Tennessee and Mississippi, and its western border with Texas and Oklahoma. Arkansas is a beautiful land of mountains and valleys, thick forests and fertile plains. The Ozark and Ouachita mountain ranges in northern and western Arkansas are known as the Highlands; the southern and eastern parts of Arkansas are called the Lowlands.History
Law and government
Geography
| North-south routes | East-west routes |
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The state's total gross state product for 1999 was $64 billion placing Arkansas 33rd in the nation. Its Per Capita Personal Income for 2000 was $22,257, 47th in the nation. The state's argiculture outputs are poultry and eggs, soybeans, sorghum, cattle, cotton, rice, hogs, and milk. Its industrial outputs are food processing, electric equipment, fabricated metal products, machinery, paper products, bromine, and vanadium.
As of 2000, the state's population was 2,673,400.
See also: List of people from Arkansas
Economy
Demographics
Important cities and towns
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Education
Colleges and universities
External links
| Political divisions of the United States | ![]() | |||||||
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